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Much or Many
We use use much and many in questions and negative sentences. They both show an amount of something.
Use 'Much' with uncountable nouns
We use much with singular nouns.
Question: "How much petrol is in the car?"
Negative clause: "We don't have much time left."
Negative clause: "We don't have much time left."
Use 'Many' with countable nouns
We use many with plural nouns
Question: "How many people were at the meeting?"
Negative clause: "Not many of the students understood the lesson."
Negative clause: "Not many of the students understood the lesson."
Use a 'A lot of' and 'Lots of' with both
Both mean a large amount. We use them with countable and uncountable nouns. A lot of is a little more formal sounding than lots of.
Countable:
"A lot of people work here."
"Lots of people work here."
"Lots of people work here."
Uncountable:
"There was a lot of snow last night."
"There was lots of snow last night."
"There was lots of snow last night."
Now decide which word is needed to complete these sentences:
- 1 - How ___ kittens did your cat have?
- 2 - There are not ___ dishes left to clean.
- 3 - Why was there so ___ smoke in the room?
- 4 - There were so ___ people on the bus I got off and walked.
- 5 - We don't see ___ birds in winter.
- 6 - How ___ money should I save?
- 7 - We couldn't think of ___ good ideas.
- 8 - Does this TV use ___ electricity?
- 9 - Is our teacher going to give us ___ homework?
- 10 - There's ___ information to remember.
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